As India’s central bank reiterated its desire to ban crypto holdings for financial institutions this week, Japan’s finance minister was telling a Tokyo financial seminar that the country would begin discussions on lifting restrictions on crypto exchange-traded funds. The split captures a widening regulatory fault line across the continent. The developments were among the top stories in the latest Asia weekly roundup from WuBlockchain, reflecting a moment where some Asian governments are opening doors while others are bolting them shut.
Japan and South Korea Push Toward Institutional Frameworks
Satsuki Katayama, Japan’s Minister of Finance and Minister of State for Financial Services, used the OPEN QUICK 2026 seminar to confirm plans to move on crypto ETFs. The government, she said, needs to create an environment where users and investors can trade with confidence as overseas ETF markets expand. Behind the statement lies legislative groundwork: amendments to incorporate crypto assets into the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act. That would bring digital assets under the same regulatory roof as traditional securities, a step that could unlock institutional capital without relying on ad-hoc rulings.
Japan’s pivot toward a fully regulated market infrastructure arrives as domestic holders face capital gains tax rates of up to roughly 55%. A parallel development in the same roundup shows a private-sector response: crypto lending firm CRYL has begun offering Bitcoin-backed mortgage loans with fiat payouts between 1 million and 1 billion yen at interest rates of 3.5% to 7.0%, letting holders avoid selling and triggering taxable events. The product may signal what a broader ETF ecosystem could deliver at scale—liquidity without forced divestment.
South Korea is moving on a parallel track but focusing on stablecoins. Bank of Korea Governor Shin Hyun-song told parliament on July 9 that the country should introduce a won stablecoin system as soon as possible, with banks as core issuers. Shin warned that legislation must include safeguards such as priority issuance by banking-led consortia and a statutory inter-agency policy body, while accounting for risks to monetary policy transmission and foreign exchange regulation circumvention. The central bank is framing stablecoins as both a competitive force and a complementary one to traditional deposit tokens, a framing that gives the regime room to evolve without immediately threatening the banking system.
Kazakhstan Accelerates Digital Asset Adoption
Kazakhstan’s approach differs from Japan and South Korea’s cautious institutionalism. President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev signed a decree that directly accelerates digital asset market growth, covering cross-border settlement mechanisms for digital assets and stablecoins, personal income tax incentives for compliant businesses, and permission for Bitcoin mining operations to use associated natural gas and oil-gas resources. The decree also calls for developing tokenized financial products and a national-level digital asset trading infrastructure, aligning with a global trend where tokenized real-world assets have crossed $20 billion on-chain, as covered in a recent Weekly Tokenization Roundup .
On the ground, the framework is already producing practical results. Alatau City Bank expanded Binance Pay crypto payment services to roughly 5,000 point-of-sale terminals. Consumers scan a QR code at checkout to pay with USDT, which the system converts instantly into Kazakhstani tenge. Merchants receive fiat equal to the billed amount and bear no direct volatility risk. The service was first demonstrated in April, launched in May, and hit 5,000 terminals within two months—a speed that signals pent-up demand for functional stablecoin rails. Kazakhstan’s push to reclaim crypto activity from offshore venues is reinforced by the decree’s encouragement for activity to shift back to licensed local platforms.
Southeast Asia and India Tighten Enforcement
Not every Asian government is racing to open markets. Malaysia’s Deputy Minister of Home Affairs disclosed that between 2022 and May 2026, authorities seized more than 75,000 cryptocurrency mining rigs and arrested 629 individuals across over 3,000 nationwide raids. The operations, targeting unauthorized power connections and meter tampering, were conducted jointly by police, the national power utility Tenaga Nasional Berhad, and local councils. Malaysia permits crypto holding and trading but does not recognize digital assets as legal tender—and appears increasingly willing to use criminal enforcement to protect grid infrastructure.
India takes an even harder line. The Reserve Bank of India reiterated in official documents that its policy may lean toward a ban, recommending that banks and financial institutions be prohibited from holding, trading, or maintaining exposure to crypto assets and privately issued stablecoins. Tax authorities warned that offshore exchanges and private wallet transactions stymie efforts to identify beneficial owners and recover revenue, while rupee-denominated peer-to-peer trades complicate income tracking. Even so, India counted roughly 39 million crypto traders holding digital assets worth around $2.1 billion as of the end of May. The gap between official policy intent and actual user behavior creates a permanent gray market, one that bans have historically failed to extinguish.
The divergence isn’t limited to these examples. Singapore’s Temasek still rules out direct crypto investments after its $275 million FTX writedown, while Russia’s State Duma passed a bill on first reading to criminalize unlicensed crypto exchange operations with penalties up to five years in prison, effective July 2027. These moves reflect a pattern: governments are no longer simply watching—they are picking sides, and the choices are starkly different depending on where they sit. For market participants, the result is a fragmented compliance map where a crypto business licensed in Kazakhstan faces a completely different reality just across the border in Russia, or in India a few time zones away.
The U.S. context adds another layer. Banks have been lobbying to alter landmark crypto legislation just days before a Senate vote, as reported by BlockchainReporter . Japan’s willingness to legislate ETFs into existence—rather than fight over them—suggests that parts of Asia may leap ahead of Western markets in providing regulated, institutional-grade crypto infrastructure, provided the legal amendments survive parliamentary scrutiny. What remains uncertain is whether enforcement-heavy markets like India and Malaysia will eventually follow suit once they observe how regulatory clarity affects capital flows, or whether they will harden their positions and drive activity deeper underground.


